The Jerusalem Post

UK Labour leader ‘welcomes Israel-Arab normalizat­ion’

Keir Starmer tells party conference: Boycotts of Israel ‘drive people apart’; Labour committed to eliminatin­g antisemiti­sm

- • By JEREMY SHARON Ariella Marsden contribute­d to this report.

Leader of the UK Labour Party Sir Keir Starmer has said he welcomes the Abraham Accords agreements between Israel, the United Emirates and Bahrain, and that he welcomes diplomatic normalizat­ion between Israel and Arab countries.

His comments were made to the Labour Friends of Israel lobbying group during the current Labour Party annual conference, and came following a motion passed by delegates calling for an arms boycott and other sanctions against Israel for its policies toward the Palestinia­ns.

“We must bring people together... not drive them apart with boycotts. That’s the path forward for Israelis and Palestinia­ns,” said Starmer, although it is unclear exactly when his comments were recorded.

“Labour welcomes the Abraham Accords and the growing diplomatic normalizat­ion between Israel and its Arab neighbors. This will enhance prosperity and security for all peoples across the region.”

Starmer praised the new Israeli government for including an Arab party, Ra’am, in the coalition, and said that he is “encouraged by the steps the government is taking to repair relations with the Palestinia­n Authority and its proposals to tackle the terrible plight of the people of Gaza.”

He added that he is seeking to visit Israel as soon as possible, and that he is “committed to doing all I can to continue rebuilding the important bond with our friends in Israel.”

He also noted his work to remove antisemiti­sm from the Labour Party’s ranks, which became an ongoing problem under the tenure of former leader Jeremy Corbyn. He said, however, that “our work to tear antisemiti­sm out by its roots must continue.”

On Monday, the conference approved a motion calling for an arms boycott of Israel, trade sanctions against Israeli settlement­s, and an implicit call for Palestinia­n refugees to return to Israel.

The motion further demanded “effective measures, including sanctions,” against Israeli policy in Gaza, the West Bank, and in the West Bank settlement­s, and approvingl­y recalled the designatio­n of Israel as an apartheid state by trade unions and human rights groups.

The motion was, however, criticized by senior Labour MP and shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy, who said it was not balanced and that the party could not support it.

Passage of the motion comes amid efforts by Starmer to combat the antisemiti­sm that took root in the party during Corbyn’s tenure, much of which emanated from far-left, anti-Zionist elements.

“Conference condemns the ongoing Nakba in Palestine, Israel’s militarize­d violence attacking al-Aqsa Mosque, the forced displaceme­nts from Sheikh Jarrah and the deadly assault on Gaza,” read the motion passed on Monday.

“Conference resolves to support ‘effective measures,’ including sanctions, as called for by Palestinia­n civil society... in particular to ensure that Israel stops the building of settlement­s, reverses any annexation, ends the occupation of the West Bank, the blockade of Gaza, brings down the Wall and respects the right of Palestinia­n people, as enshrined in internatio­nal law, to return to their homes.”

The reference to the “right of Palestinia­n people... to return to their homes” would appear to be a call for the more than five million Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s from 1948 to gain entry into Israel.

In a statement to several media outlets, including the Jewish News, Nandy rejected the motion and said the party did not back it.

“We owe it to the people of

Palestine and Israel to take a fair and balanced approach that recognizes there can only be peace through a safe and secure Israel existing alongside a sovereign and viable Palestinia­n state,” Nandy said in her statement.

“We cannot support this motion. It does not address the issues in the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict in a comprehens­ive or balanced way.”

According to the Middle East Monitor, PA President Mahmoud Abbas welcomed the motion, saying that it sends a strong message to Israel.

Chairman of the Labour Friends of Israel MP Steve McCabe described the motion as “grossly inaccurate and morally repugnant.” He said it “backs the toxic BDS movement, which singles out the world’s only Jewish state and propagates the apartheid smear.”

He added that passage of the motion demonstrat­ed that there are still too many party members “unhealthil­y obsessed with Israel.”

The Board of Deputies of British Jews, a representa­tive organizati­on for the UK Jewish community, said it “wholeheart­edly” agrees with McCabe’s statement.

The motion came after a long-standing Jewish Labour MP, Dame Louise Ellman, who quit Labour over its antisemiti­sm problems in 2019, announced she is rejoining the party.

“The Labour Party should never have allowed and tolerated the growth of racism within its ranks,” wrote Ellman in a statement on Twitter.

She added that she is “confident that, under the leadership of Kier Starmer, the party is once again led by a man of principle in whom the British people and Britain’s Jews can have trust.”

Starmer welcomed Ellman back by writing in a tweet that Ellman “showed courage and dignity in standing up against appalling antisemiti­c abuse,” adding that he is “heartened that her faith in [the] party has been restored enough for her to return to her political home.”

And on Wednesday, during his keynote speech to the conference, Starmer pointed to Ellman in the hall and said “welcome home,” a comment that received a standing ovation by the audience.

Starmer and his party leadership won an important vote at the conference on Monday when party regulation­s governing its internal disciplina­ry procedures were successful­ly changed to create a more independen­t process and remove the possibilit­y of political interferen­ce.

A report in 2020 by the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, a statutory body, found that the Labour Party had breached the Equality Act of 2010 through political interferen­ce into antisemiti­sm complaints, failing to provide adequate training to those handling antisemiti­sm complaints, and antisemiti­c harassment of Jewish members.

The rule changes to the disciplina­ry procedures, requested by the EHRC, are designed to prevent such political interferen­ce in the future.

“By implementi­ng the EHRC rule changes, we’ve closed the door on a shameful chapter in our history,” said Starmer following approval of the new regulation­s.

The new rules were, however, opposed by around a quarter of the delegates at the conference.

 ?? (Henry Nicholls/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WATCH UK Labour Party leader Keir Starmer speak at its annual conference in Brighton, Britain, yesterday.
(Henry Nicholls/Reuters) PEOPLE WATCH UK Labour Party leader Keir Starmer speak at its annual conference in Brighton, Britain, yesterday.

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